"CVA Action" Rally at CVA 2 weeks ago.
Realistically, the numbers were staggering: CVA Action needed to raise about 3 million dollars in a few weeks. They had a plan in place to not have CVA open for the 2013-14 school year (because current students have found other schools and there was no recruiting being the school was planning to close), but then to open back up as a smaller institution in the fall of 2014. After a few weeks of collecting money and asking for donations, CVA Action still hadn't quite hit the $100,000 mark. That's an AMAZING amount of money to have raised in such a short period of time for a small school, but it wasn't enough. Last week, the board of trustees for CVA announced that it was no longer possible to save the school, and CVA Action came out with this statement:
Sad News
Sad news from the last night’s Board of Trustees Meeting: The College of Visual Arts Board of Trustees reaffirmed last night that CVA will be closed at the end of this school year. They took a look at our plan, decided that if we could raise $3 million dollars in two weeks they might be willing to put a couple of CVA Action people on the board and try to open again in a year. CVA Action was formed to keep CVA open.
The Board of Trustees asked us to take part in closing the school, and we cannot do that. We voted unanimously to reject the trustees’ offer. We are heartbroken and angry. We feel that this did not have to happen this way, had the Board of Trustees and school administration had told us of the dire financial situation last Fall. But that’s not the hand we were dealt.
The student response was awesome. The work the students, faculty, staff, alumni and friends did was hugely effective. In the past two weeks you reached out into the community and you found support. You showed true creativity. If we had seen that from the administration and the trustees a year or six months ago, we might have been celebrating tonight. We do have things to celebrate. The students and graduates of the College of Visual Arts are making a difference in the world. Whether it is making beautiful art, founding the digital communications division of a major advertising agency, teaching or any of the other things our fellow alumni are doing, the school has a wonderful legacy to celebrate.
Painting by Eugène Delacroix, modified by Keri Huber
I'm not going to air my dirty laundry here - if you want to know what I think happened at CVA, you'll have to talk to me in person. It seems it was not only because of declining enrollment and rising costs. I feel much the same as many of the other full-time faculty members at the school. But now that's hardly here nor there.
Photo from Michelle Stolz (current CVA student and former student of mine).
They're also coming together in other "fun" ways. This past weekend was the final "CVA Prom." I had to miss this event, but it looked fantastic. It was put together by students who held a drawing rally to raise money for it, and it was just the kind of thing you'll find CVA students doing - finding ways to get things done.
Pre-prom photo by Maria Cameron.
Photo by Maria Santiago.
Photo by Maria Santiago.
Photo by Maria Santiago.
The marquee originally said "CVA PROM," but we changed it.
Two of my all-time top-10 favorite CVA people.
Paul always had a way with the ladies.
Lookin' good, fellas.
Moose and my fiancée.
My fiancée being kissed by my soon-to-be best man.
Marcy, my official CVA date. And I forgot that I wore THAT. (That entire outfit cost me $8.)
This sums up our prom perfectly.
It's going to be an interesting final few weeks at CVA. This is uncharted territory for many of us. Wish us all luck. (But chances are, if you're a typical hard-working, motivated, resourceful CVA student or graduate, you won't need "luck.")